I care for for both of my parents on a pt basis. My siblings and I are trying to get them to go to assisted living, but my Mom refuses to leave and my father won't go without her. We have had numerous people assess their needs and no one seems to notice the hoarding as being a critical issue. Their health is declining and I find myself getting more involved with their care. I am a newly single Mom of a 16 year old girl. She needs me to be a Mom, and the issues with caring for my parents is affecting her. I am trying to go back to work as I haven't been able too due to the extra time in caring for my parents. Additionally my mother is very selfish and manipulative, and honestly a toxic person. I know I have to release the ties or it will have negative affects on my well being and then my daughters. Can anyone provide insight you provide guidance or resources for dealing with the hoarding issue? I have exhausted all community resources, and their PCP physician has put his hands up as to what he can do.
Also my Mom is open to getting care in the home on a daily basis, but she has control and trust issues, so she only wants certain people doing it for her. Just wondering if others have dealt with hoarding issues?
If your mom is keeping 'garbage' a.k.a. things nobody would want or use in any conceivable way then ditch it [like old newspaper/flyers]- otherwise if there family history that you could be throwing out - please define your issue closer so we can help -
If there is family value get her to explain each thing [& document it] as that could 1 - show her you care about family & 2 - show she is significant still
FYI - by doing the above she may then be more manageable because you have shown you care about the family & will know that you won't just grab everything to go to dump - good luck & let us know how she responds
Same with assisted living. Unless you want to go through the nightmare of trying to get them declared incompetent, which would be next to impossible anyway, they can't be forced into assisted living. Their lives, their choices. Now live your life, and don't let your parents take away from the time and energy you need for your daughter and for yourself.
It sounds to me you need professional help to detach. As other posts have said, you need to put your daughter first. Get caller ID and don't talk to them. They are not your responsibility, your daughter is. What would they do if you were killed in a car accident? They would manage, so let them. Take care of your daughter, she really needs you.
You can only be a doormat if you lay down on the floor.
Take care of you and your daughter, first and foremost. Mom and dad come in a far distant 3rd. I liked the idea of making a list of what you do for them and culling it down to "essentials". Then culling it even more.
My mother is also a hoarder. She will no longer even allow me to throw anything away. I actually used a tissue and when I opened the trash she said "WHAT are you throwing out?" A used tissue, did she want to keep it?
The concept of a professional organizer is great--except the rate of relapse among people who are forced into cleaning is about 100%. You'd have a tidy clean home for a couple of days. I cleaned my mother's 2 years ago (WITH her permission and total involvement) and that night she went out and retrieved more than half of what I had "junked" out of the garbage bins.
You can call APS. They WILL do something. The dr doesn't care and wouldn't do a thing, why people think drs are sources of advice on cleaning is beyond me.
My mother is so attached to her junk. She feels that all this stuff is like actually having the people who gave it to her there in the house--whereas if they actually came to visit, she wouldn't enjoy that. It's a mental disorder that is still not really defined. Why some people hang on to everything that comes in the house, and some keep a house so sterile it looks as if it's not lived in....
You can clean every single day for the rest of your life and your parents will still win. Walk away from the hoard, do what you can for them and call it good. All I do now for mother is take out the huge piles of newspapers. Period.
I haven't seen anyone capable of controlling another person's hoard and have it work out. That show "Hoarders" which brought the word into use? They usually have a tagline on the show and it's almost always that the person they "helped" has gone back to hoarding. Sad.
I believe you have somewhat of a guilt complex that makes you feel as if you are expected to take care of your parents because they raised you. It is a heck of a lot easier to raise a child--even a defiant one--than "raise" an older/elderly person-----I often say it is like dealing with a defiant 11 year old in an elderly body because after 60+ years, the behavior is already set in stone & it is impossible to change it. My mother's favorite line is "Nobody is going to tell me how to live." Ironically, she constantly tries to tell me how to live & doesn't like when that same line is said back to her. You do not have to do anything against their wishes, even in your attempt to make their lives better. You can't make somebody do something they don't want to do. Give up the fight---you won't win.
If the hoarding doesn't bother them, it shouldn't bother you. Their lifestyle is different from yours & you will be extremely stressed trying to change theirs. Put your time, energy & love into raising your daughter---she is the one that needs guidance, love & advice now. Your parents are grown adults---they certainly don't need those things. If it stresses you out too much to go to their house, don't go. You don't have to witness the environment in which they CHOOSE---remember that they have CHOSEN this way---to live. They are also choosing to alienate their grand child, but again---if they are choosing to do this, they must accept the consequences.
Stop wanting control over how they live, your mother's toxic behavior & whatever other issues there are. You mother will not change, and the only way to handle toxic family members is to distance yourself from them. She has been narcissistic, selfish & manipulative since the day you were born, and probably long before that. If you make yourself available to her, she will suck the life out of you & then you will be the one that suffers because your mother doesn't care. Waiting for someone to change from being a manipulative, selfish person will result in a life-long battle because those types of people DO.NOT.CHANGE. I deal with the same thing every day--selfish, manipulative, negative, miserable mother who has been like that my entire life (and long before I came into the world, according to my 2 older brothers). My one brother says that my mother has an uncanny ability to take a happy, positive person & flip their mood around to sad, depressed & unhappy in minutes because she is totally focused on negativity & misery--she talks about the "what if's" constantly, like "What if social security is stopped? I won't be able to live!!!" and "I thought I was bad--my neighbor is worse off than me, her arms are all purple and she can hardly walk." (meanwhile, the neighbor is 91 years old, still drives, does gardening, enjoys time with her children & grandchildren). My mother has effectively driven her 3 kids away from her--my 2 brothers take her in measured doses while I live with her so I deal with it every day--and does not have relationships with any of her 4 grandchildren. Neither of them made any efforts to spend time with their grandchildren (4 boys)--my mother expected my brothers to bring their kids to her instead of my mother making an effort to go see them. It wasn't until I became an adult & living on my own that I started looking in retrospect at the things she did when I was growing up, how selfish & entitled & controlling & manipulative & negative she was, and she hasn't changed at all.
Your sister is the executor of their affairs & she lives 3 hours away? Then it is her responsibility to do something, not yours. One thing I've learned in my life is that one single person cannot be the only person that cares because it will drive that person crazy. It may bother you greatly, but if it doesn't bother your parents you can't focus on it. You can certainly let your parents know that the way they choose to live is bothersome to you & you will limit your exposure to it for your own sanity---unless it is imperative that you go to their house, you will not be there. Let them know that until they agree to live in a cleaner environment, you will not subject yourself or your teenager to an unhealthy living condition. Also let them know that if they decide that they want to clean up their home you fully support that & will make every effort to help them out.
I'm almost 60 yrs old. I've spent the last 20 of it trying to do what I thought was best for my mom and my own health is in the toilet. She's healthier than I am and I'll probably die before she does.
I'm telling you all this to stop you now, before you make the same mistakes I did. Take care of you and your daughter, you come first. Whatever spare time you have, try to involve your daughter so she understands but don't force her.
I'm praying for you and I pray you find a good job that will support you and your daughter, that you and your daughter can work together on the grandparent issues and take care of yourself first. You're no good to anyone if you end up like me. Prayers and goodluck to you, you're a great mom and daughter, don't ever forget it!
I'm familiar with hoarding because I have two friends who hoard. Hoarders need to be treated by a mental health expert who has specific training in this disorder AND the treatment needs to happen at the person's home. Office / Clinic / Hospital based treatment for hoarding has been proven to be ineffective and can make the problem worse.
Before going ahead, you want to assess how much of a problem hoarding actually is. Here is a link to the Internal OCD Foundation's Clutter Image Rating Scale: http://www.hoardingconnectioncc.org/Hoarding_cir.pdf This rating scale has nine pictures of living rooms, bedrooms and kitchens, in various levels of clutter. It does take some judgement, but what you do is choose the picture that best describes the level of clutter you are seeing. If the average level of clutter is similar to rooms #4 or higher, you really do have reason to be concerned. I live in federally subsidized housing. Where I live, if your place looked like that in #2 or higher during an annual inspection, you would get into trouble.
The first thing I would do is contact your Council for the Aging. Hoarding is a common problem amongst seniors. My local COA has a social worker who is trained to treat hoarding. Not only does she do home visits, she has a group for 'clutterers' that meets regularly at the local senior center. She's in contact with local training programs and can arrange for a hoarder to work with an occupational therapist or social work trainee who is learning to treat hoarding. These trainees are well supervised and enthusiastic. Unfortunately, these sort of training programs are few and far between. If you don't know / can't find a local Council for the Aging, I would call your state's Office of Elder Affairs--they'll know who to talk to. If that doesn't work, call your state senator or state representative's office. They have a constituent services representative, who will work on your behalf to figure out who you should call.
In my area, we have Elder Services--which is a different organization (with different eligibility rules) than the Council for the Aging. I would try contacting them as well.
If this doesn't work, I would consider consulting a private Elder Care Coordinator who has mental health training and experience. Mine was an advanced practice nurse who was a nursing supervisor for the geriatric unit at a well-known psychiatric hospital. She was very good at sussing out the situation and helping you create a plan as to where to go from here. She was experienced organizing interventions, moderating family meetings, supervising care, etc. I would consider going this route.
This is important: hiring an organizer / cleaning service to help your parents de-hoard is only a temporary solution. The research is very clear on this--when hoarders are forced to clean up, but the hoarding itself is not professionally treated, they will continue to hoard and it's likely that they will recreate the problem within a few years. This is why hoarders need to work with someone with mental health training. In my friend's case, she did get a cleaning service to help--but only after she made significant improvements in her hoarding behavior and was actively getting rid of junk. My friend 'graduated' from the mental health intervention, to the 'Certified Professional Organizer' and is doing really, really well.
If the hoarding problem is serious, potentially life threatening AND your parents don't / can't do anything about it, then it's time to call Adult Protective Services. Remember that your parents are adults and adults are free to make some pretty dumb decisions.
Your first responsibility is to your own family, especially your 16 year old daughter. She comes first... if it's between taking her to a band performance and visiting your parents, please, take your daughter to band--and enjoy the performance. If it's between taking your daughter on a trip to visit colleges or minding your parents, go take your daughter to visit colleges. (Visiting colleges is fun!) It's not your job to wait hand and foot on your parents.
You might consider hiring a Certified Professional Organizer® who specializes in hoarding and seniors. That is what I do. It is my experience that bringing in a "non-interested party" can be much more effective in clearing excess clutter and creating a safer environment.
If the hoarding is hazardous to their health -- attracting varmints, threatening to topple over on them, making egress from some rooms dangerous -- then report them to Adult Protective Services. If it poses no danger, let them live in it.
You need to detach from your parents. You need to nurture your daughter. I'm sure you know this, but having dysfunctional upbringing may make that especially hard. If you are having a difficult time doing what you know you need to do, seek counseling.
Sadly, her dad died before the mother. He wouldn't leave his wife either.
The mother ended up in a NH after the dad was gone. He had been the care giver but he enabled the mother in all her issues.
After the mother died, the daughters had the chore of cleaning the house. Two floods made a nice mess.
Do not allow your mom to suck the life out of you. This is a critical time for your daughter and for you.
If you could get the dad out, she might follow but probably not.
Get yourself and daughter into therapy. You have to detach.
They are competent to make their own bad choices; you make your own good ones.
You have a 16 yo daughter who has just had her world rocked by her parents' divorce. That is where your obligations lies right now.
You are an amazing daughter for doing as much as you have. I know its not easy. About the hoarding issue, its a very tough one. My father and mother grew up poor and believed in keeping everything! I tried to do a little here and there to clean up or donate some items. My sister said that even made my dad mad. He said what was the harm in leaving everything.
I always felt so responsible for everything. All my siblings left and I was the only one left to clean as it were. I'm not sure if a social worker can talk to them on your behalf. Maybe an independent third party is what is needed to get through to them.
What happens is that we, the grown child, are enabling our parents to keep up their own lifestyle while we need to make major changes to our own. I bet 10 years ago if you asked your parents about caregiving, saying you would need to quit your job, and spend less time with your daughter, your parents would have said "no, do not do that".
As for the hoarding, I seen enough shows on TV to notice that is it almost impossible to curb the hoarding, it will continue no matter what. There are some successes, but not many. Most caregiving Agency will not send their employees into a hoarding situation.
Sadly we need to wait for an emergency situation before we can finally get a parent to move into Assisted Living if they can budget such the cost, or into a nursing home where Medicaid [different from Medicare] will fund the cost.
I had to do that 'wait' with my own parents [in their 90's], wait for that panic call, run down to the house, then call 911. In the mean time you are sitting on pins and needles every time the telephone rings, and have many sleepless nights, while the parents are sleeping soundly with no care in the world. Not fair, is it.